What are the odds? Perfect bracket makes doctor a celebrity

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — In a story March 28 about Gregg Nigl’s perfect bracket through two rounds of the NCAA Tournament, The Associated Press erroneously reported he had changed the name on his Twitter account. The Twitter account did not belong to Nigl but was changed by someone else to use his name.

A corrected version of the story is below:

What are the odds? Perfect bracket makes doctor a celebrity

Gregg Nigl defied huge odds and picked every NCAA Tournament game correctly through the first two rounds

By MITCH STACY

AP Sports Writer

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — A 40-year-old neuropsychologist from Ohio has become an overnight celebrity for having a perfect NCAA Tournament bracket through the first two rounds.

Gregg Nigl is the only person among tens of millions to fill out brackets on major online platforms to pick every game correctly so far. That’s 48-0 (a life-changing parlay, for any sucker willing to play it). He’s just 15 picks away from pulling off the nearly impossible.

“My phone did not stop ringing,” said Nigl, who lives in Columbus but happened to be vacationing in Vermont when the news broke. “I had to delete old voicemail messages because my voice mailbox got full, so many texts, tons and tons of Facebook friend requests. It was wild.”

Nigl (pronounced NIGH-gull) did a Skype interview with Al Roker of the “Today” show, went into a TV studio in Burlington to sit for a CNN interview and chatted with a bunch of other reporters. Buick got in touch and wants to fly him and his 9-year-old son Kaiden to California to see their beloved Michigan Wolverines play Texas Tech in the Sweet 16 on Thursday night.

As a prognosticator, he’s attained sudden and huge respect. But here’s the truth:

Nigl woke up with a terrible head cold last Thursday and nearly blew off filling out this particular bracket. He already was in three other tournament pools with friends and had another invitation.

“I took cold medicine and I was laying there, and I already called into work (sick),” he said. “I was about to go back to bed, and I was like, I’ll just do it real quick on my phone. I came so close to saying just forget it.”

He spent all of about three minutes making the picks.

There were some educated choices, some random, some favorite teams. He grew up a Michigan fan in Saginaw; his wife’s family follows Michigan State. He picked Oregon because he loves to visit there. UC Irvine was a pick because he knows someone one who works at that university.

The bracket was such an afterthought, Nigl wasn’t even checking it. He didn’t know it was perfect until someone from NCAA.com tracked him down Monday after calling his office.

Picking the first 48 winners correctly is ridiculous. The odds of picking a perfect bracket to the end are infinitesimal.

That said, Nigl needs 15 more games to run the table. Piece of cake, right? Here are his picks to get there: